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- Ultimate WordPress Spam Protection Guide – Step by Step (2026)by Editorial Staff on 17/07/2026 at 17:01
If you run a WordPress site, then you know that spam is a real annoying problem whether it comes to contact forms, WordPress comments, or user registrations. The good news is that stopping spam in WordPress is a lot easier than you probably think, and… Read More » The post Ultimate WordPress Spam Protection Guide – Step by Step (2026) first appeared on WPBeginner.
- How to Connect AI Agents With WordPress using MCP (Step by Step)by Nouman Yaqoob on 10/07/2026 at 12:38
AI assistants like Claude Code, Cowork, and ChatGPT are incredible productivity boosters, and if you wished that you could connect these AI tools with WordPress directly, then you’re not alone. Lately, I have been using WordPress MCP by WPVibe to let my AI assistant manage… Read More » The post How to Connect AI Agents With WordPress using MCP (Step by Step) first appeared on WPBeginner.
- Introducing HelpJet: The AI Chatbot That Answers Your Customers’ Questions in Secondsby Syed Balkhi on 07/07/2026 at 10:00
Ever wanted to build an AI support agent for your WordPress website or WooCommerce store? Imagine customers asking a question at 2 a.m. and getting an instant, accurate answer, pulled straight from your own help docs, website content, and custom private SOPs. Plus, it can… Read More » The post Introducing HelpJet: The AI Chatbot That Answers Your Customers’ Questions in Seconds first appeared on WPBeginner.
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- Critical NGINX Vulnerability Can Crash Workers and May Allow Remote Code Executionby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 19/07/2026 at 20:42
F5 has shipped fixes for a critical nginx flaw that lets a remote, unauthenticated attacker trigger a heap buffer overflow in the worker process with crafted HTTP requests. CVE-2026-42533 was patched on July 15 in nginx 1.30.4 (stable) and 1.31.3 (mainline), and in NGINX Plus 37.0.3.1; anyone on an earlier build should upgrade. Triggering it can crash or restart the worker, causing a denial of
- UAC-0145 Uses ClickFix CAPTCHAs to Infect Ukrainian Devices wih Malwareby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 19/07/2026 at 13:30
Russian state-sponsored threat actors have been observed leveraging the infamous ClickFix strategy to trick Ukrainian targets into infecting their own machines with data-stealing malware. According to the Computer Emergency Response Team of Ukraine (CERT-UA), the activity has been attributed to UAC-0145, a sub-cluster within Sandworm, an advanced hacking unit affiliated with GRU, Russia's
- SonicWall SMA Zero-Days Exploited Before Disclosure to Gain Root Accessby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 19/07/2026 at 13:18
A previously undocumented threat actor has been attributed to the exploitation of recently disclosed SonicWall Secure Mobile Access (SMA) 1000 series VPN appliances as zero-days prior their public disclosure since June 22, 2026. Cybersecurity company Volexity is tracking the activity under the moniker UTA0533. The discovery was made following an incident response investigation earlier this
- New wp2shell WordPress Core Flaw Lets Unauthenticated Attackers Run Codeby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 17/07/2026 at 21:20
Updated July 18, 2026: the two flaws now carry CVE IDs, the full mechanism has been published, a persistent-object-cache condition has surfaced, and a working proof-of-concept is public. The story below reflects all of it. An anonymous HTTP request can run code on a WordPress site. The bug is in core, so a bare install with zero plugins is exploitable. Every 6.9 and 7.0 site was in range until
- OpenSSL HollowByte Flaw Could Freeze Server Memory with 11-Byte TLS Requestsby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 17/07/2026 at 20:20
Eleven bytes will make an unpatched OpenSSL server set aside up to 131 KB of memory for a message that never arrives. On the glibc systems Okta tested, that memory is gone until the process restarts. OpenSSL shipped the HollowByte fix in June with no CVE, no advisory, and no changelog entry pointing at it. Okta's Red Team, which reported the denial-of-service bug and named it, published the








